Recent advances have clarified how the brain detects CO2 to regulate breathing (central respiratory chemoreception). These mechanisms are reviewed and their significance is presented in the general context of CO2/pH homeostasis through breathing. At rest, respiratory chemoreflexes initiated at peripheral and central sites mediate rapid stabilization of arterial PCO2 and pH. Specific brainstem neurons (e.g., retrotrapezoid nucleus, RTN; serotonergic) are activated by PCO2 and stimulate breathing. RTN neurons detect CO2 via intrinsic proton receptors (TASK-2, GPR4), synaptic input from peripheral chemoreceptors and signals from astrocytes. Respiratory chemoreflexes are arousal state dependent whereas chemoreceptor stimulation produces arousal...
The respiratory central pattern generator must respond to chemosensory cues to maintain oxygen (O2) ...
Complex mechanisms that detect changes in brainstem parenchymal PCO2/[H+] and trigger adaptive chang...
Brain activations related to the control of breathing are not completely known. The respiratory syst...
Recent advances have clarified how the brain detects CO2 to regulate breathing (central respiratory ...
The arterial partial pressure (P CO2) of carbon dioxide is virtually constant because of the close m...
In this review, we ex-amine why blood pressure (BP) and sympathetic nerve activity (SNA) increase du...
Regulation of systemic PCO2 is a life-preserving homeostatic mechanism. In the medulla oblongata, th...
The substantia nigra (SN) and ventral tegmental area (VTA) are vital for the control of movement, go...
AbstractThe functional role of retrotrapezoid nucleus (RTN) neurons as the central chemoreceptors an...
Producción CientíficaSpontaneous breathing requires feedback controls in which detection of blood ga...
Central chemoreception is the mechanism by which the brain regulates breathing in response to change...
Breathing is an automatic process that we hardly pay any attention to in our daily life. As a social...
© Hawkins et al. Cerebral blood flow is highly sensitive to changes in CO2/H+ where an increase in C...
Ventral regions of the medulla oblongata of the brainstem are populated by astrocytes sensitive to p...
We investigated the neural basis for spontaneous chemo-stimulated increases in ventilation in awake,...
The respiratory central pattern generator must respond to chemosensory cues to maintain oxygen (O2) ...
Complex mechanisms that detect changes in brainstem parenchymal PCO2/[H+] and trigger adaptive chang...
Brain activations related to the control of breathing are not completely known. The respiratory syst...
Recent advances have clarified how the brain detects CO2 to regulate breathing (central respiratory ...
The arterial partial pressure (P CO2) of carbon dioxide is virtually constant because of the close m...
In this review, we ex-amine why blood pressure (BP) and sympathetic nerve activity (SNA) increase du...
Regulation of systemic PCO2 is a life-preserving homeostatic mechanism. In the medulla oblongata, th...
The substantia nigra (SN) and ventral tegmental area (VTA) are vital for the control of movement, go...
AbstractThe functional role of retrotrapezoid nucleus (RTN) neurons as the central chemoreceptors an...
Producción CientíficaSpontaneous breathing requires feedback controls in which detection of blood ga...
Central chemoreception is the mechanism by which the brain regulates breathing in response to change...
Breathing is an automatic process that we hardly pay any attention to in our daily life. As a social...
© Hawkins et al. Cerebral blood flow is highly sensitive to changes in CO2/H+ where an increase in C...
Ventral regions of the medulla oblongata of the brainstem are populated by astrocytes sensitive to p...
We investigated the neural basis for spontaneous chemo-stimulated increases in ventilation in awake,...
The respiratory central pattern generator must respond to chemosensory cues to maintain oxygen (O2) ...
Complex mechanisms that detect changes in brainstem parenchymal PCO2/[H+] and trigger adaptive chang...
Brain activations related to the control of breathing are not completely known. The respiratory syst...